Hey I'm glad I got an honest response from you. Sorry if I'm pushing it a little hard here, but if you take a look at your responses on the last few pages to other skeptics, you put them down and really blew off any arguments that they had, telling them all that they were "missing the point" (
1,
2,
3,
4). Well, that's not nice. Also, you had the support and thanks for a great deal of people (over 20, then over 100!!!), which I think got to your head (
1,
2). The way you're talking now is a lot different than the way you talked to these people who were skeptical of the method. As someone that wants to find the truth, I can't help but speak up.
Let me apologize for digging into this thread so much, but I don't want people reading my accusations against you and thinking that I'm a total douche who has nothing better to do. You have a million people thanking you and you even have that nifty green GUIDE sign. This is my way of letting people know why I'm even debating in the first place.
Now, onto the issue at hand. You claim (and this method depends on the fact that)
OverclockWidget forces the processor to scale down when the screen is off (
1,
2,
3). If we had to prove otherwise, we'd have to
somehow do a benchmark when the screen is off. Impossible, right?
Well I took a second just now to think about it, and it's actually quite easy to do.
SetCPU has a LONG BENCH benchmarking feature that takes long enough for us to see if turning off the screen does indeed trigger the CPU to scale down. You may argue that the benchmark might still be too short, but at least we can all agree that OverclockWidget shouldn't have a NEGATIVE effect right? Well that's exactly what it turns out to be. I have a video that's uploading to Youtube that should clear this up, but I'll describe it in text here.
- Uninstall OverclockWidget, Install SetCPU
- Set MAX and MIN in SetCPU down to 245. Test that SetCPU has in fact done nothing by hitting REFRESH a bunch of times (the # on the upper left goes up and beyond 245)
- Go into System Info and do some LONG BENCH with the screen on. Should get around 1000.
- Now do some more LONG BENCH, but immediately turn off the screen when the benchmark starts. You may get around 1000, or something even HIGHER. This means that the CPU is DOWNSCALING itself and the test is taking LONGER to complete. This is what you'd expect Android to do.
- Install OverclockWidget and set it up according to the OP. Make sure you save.
- Go into SetCPU and do some LONG BENCH with the screen on. You should get around 1000 like usual.
- Now do some LONG BENCH, but turn the screen OFF immediate when the benchmark starts. Wait for it to finish, and look at your score. You should get around 1000 still. However, in my tests, I have NEVER gotten a HIGHER number, meaning the CPU NEVER downscaled when OverclockWidget was active and the screen was off. This actually runs counter to what you claim, since if OverclockWidget some how did magically FORCE the CPU to downscale, then the number should be MUCH higher.
- I hope this has proved that OverclockWidget indeed does NOT force the CPU to downscale when the screen is off. Now people may argue that it does SOMETHING else to save battery, but until that happens, I think it is wrong to think that skeptics are just on the wrong track or "missing the point". If you've found these steps confusing, a Youtube video is on the way.
Hey I realize you were just trying to help at first, but it turned into a thing where "hey, if you're a skeptic, you're missing the point". Plus you've managed to convince soooo many people that this works, I think it's about time we figured out why.
Thanks for listening and I truly do appreciate your hard work. But I just totally believe that your method does not work. If OverclockWidget is in fact doing something, heck let's find it and use it, instead of pushing the side affect